Sandra Johnson refuses to turn her back on the problem. And she believes North Carolina Baptists shouldn’t turn away either.

For Johnson, a North American Mission Board (NAMB) missionary based in N.C., the issue of human trafficking is personal, and it’s a problem that is right in our “own backyard.” With human trafficking being the fastest-growing crime in the world, Johnson said it is an issue that every Christian should be involved in stopping. Right now there are believed to be around 27 million people living in slavery. And many of those victims are in N.C., which is among the top 10 states where human trafficking is an issue.

Children as young as 6 years old are being sold on the streets and on the Internet, she said.

“I can’t turn my back on that … it could easily be my grandchildren,” said Johnson, a member of Green Street Baptist Church in High Point and president and founder of Triad Ladder of Hope, a non-profit organization that helps human trafficking victims escape from bondage, rebuild their lives and shares the love of Jesus with them in the process. “There are more people enslaved today than in any other time in history. … This is ‘free America,’ but it’s not.”

Johnson was commissioned by NAMB during the Baptist State Convention of N.C.’s annual meeting in Greensboro last November as a Mission Service Corps (MSC) missionary. While helping people – most of whom are immigrants from all over the world – escape slavery through Triad Ladder of Hope, she also looks for opportunities to share her faith.

By giving through the Cooperative Program and to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American Missions, Southern Baptists help provide training and ministry-related support for missionaries like Johnson. As a MSC missionary, Johnson receives direct financial support through donations and ministry partners, which include several N.C. Baptist churches like Green Street Baptist.

Kevin Ezell, president of NAMB, said during Johnson’s commissioning service that NAMB seeks to find more ways to fight issues like human trafficking throughout the U.S. and in Canada.

“When you hear about it for the very first time, you don’t think … that there is a need in North Carolina,” Ezell said. “I did not realize North Carolina was in the [top 10], and Atlanta is [near] the top as far as the most challenging area.”

Sandra Johnson

“North Carolina Baptists … you are one of the finest and one of the strongest conventions the Southern Baptist Convention has,” Ezell said.

“You’re one of the finest leaders. You’re some of the finest pastors. That [puts] you in a very dangerous situation because we can look at all that is going right and lose a sense of intensity and tenacity and urgency.”

Missionaries like Johnson, Ezell said, are examples of those who are willing to step out and make a difference for Christ.

This past year, Triad Ladder of Hope has put an intense focus on helping victims find jobs through training opportunities. They seek out victims through visiting homeless and domestic violence shelters.
They also reach out to women who are vulnerable to human trafficking through working in strip clubs.

About once a month Johnson works with ministry volunteers who go into clubs to build relationships with the women there. While volunteers hand out gift bags they seek to find those who may not be there by choice.

“Many victims of sex trafficking can be found in strip clubs,” Johnson said. “Sometimes it’s a husband that is forcing them to be there, and he takes all of the money.”

It’s a ministry that takes time and patience.

“The first time it’s kind of awkward,” Johnson said.

“But you have to build that relationship as you go in. Once we’ve been in several times, they begin to trust you and start talking to you more. We care about them … When God opens the door we will share Christ with them and let them know … that Jesus loves them.”

How many slaves do you use?

Creating awareness is the key to helping fight human trafficking.

Many Americans don’t realize how the products they buy every day can have an impact on those working in some factories, where human trafficking runs rampant. “Some people use as many 150 slaves a day,” Johnson said. “It’s unreal.”

“If there is one thing that people need to know is that this is a problem [that] … could be right in your neighborhood. It’s that bad in North Carolina.

“It can be someone who knocks on your door and is selling a product. … It could be someone living next door to you. It could be somebody doing your nails. It could be somebody serving your food in a restaurant. It’s right in your face, literally.”

Johnson shared how she used to attend church with a woman who was being trafficked. She was a nanny, and the people she worked for didn’t pay her, Johnson said. The woman said she felt trapped because she was living in the U.S. illegally and genuinely cared for the children in the home.

Triad Ladder of Hope has helped reunite trafficking victims with their families. They even provide simple things like a bag of groceries for victims who struggle to make a living.

In addition to financial support and awareness, prayer is the most critical thing the ministry needs.

“That’s the very first thing I tell everybody,” she said. We need people to pray about this issue.

“When [volunteers go into a strip club] we have someone sitting in the parking lot praying for them,” she said, “We cover everything with prayer. We are firm believers [in prayer].”

Occasionally Johnson will receive a phone call from a former victim who has rebuilt her life through the ministry.

“It’s so sweet to get those phone calls,” she said. “You do get attached to them … They’re survivors.”

For more information go to triadladderofhope.org/. To report a human trafficking case, contact the National Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline at (888) 373-7888.

Visit here for more about the Annie Armstrong offering and the Week of Prayer.

ABOUT THE BIBLICAL RECORDER
Since 1833 the Biblical Recorder has served North Carolina Baptists as the Baptist State Convention's official news journal - with the emphasis on news. The paper was founded by Thomas Meredith, an early pastor, writer and denominational statesman in North Carolina.